Saturday, 17 September 2011

Report: Sexual minorities victims in US counter-terrorism

Source: World Pulse

By Marietta Karadimova

The U.S. government must take steps to stop women and sexual minorities around the world from becoming invisible victims of its counter-terrorism policies, according to the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice (CHRGJ) at NYU School of Law. The 163 page report — A Decade Lost: Locating Gender in U.S. Counter-Terrorism — is the first account of how U.S. counter terrorism efforts have undermined the rights of women and sexual minorities. These policies have also failed to protect women and sexual minorities from terrorism, despite the Obama Administration’s position that women’s inequality threatens national security.

“Far from making good on its promise to the world’s women, the U.S. government has bartered away women’s rights for short-term security gains,” said Jayne Huckerby, CHRGJ’s Research Director.
“From anti-terror cuts in aid to Somalia, to negotiating with the Taliban in Afghanistan, it is women and sexual minorities who suffer first.”
Based on several years of research, including extensive interviews with U.S. and foreign government officials and regional consultations in the United States, Asia, Africa and the Middle East and North Africa, A Decade Lost uncovers how the six pillars of U.S. counter-terrorism — development, defense, anti-terrorism financing, intelligence, border security, and strategic communications — include and impact women and sexual minorities. Comprehensive in its scope, A Decade Lost presents numerous examples of where the U.S. government’s failure to consider gender undermines both security and equality objectives.

Among its key findings, A Decade Lost finds that development assistance that channels money into making young men less prone to extremism is leaving women and girls behind; that anti-terrorist finance laws stop critical resources from reaching women and LGBTI organizations; that immigration bars are re-victimizing victims of trafficking, terrorism and anti-gay violence in Iraq; and that the securitization of the government’s relationship with Muslim communities in the United States — which is only set to rise with the imminent release of a new U.S. policy on community engagement and preventing extremism — is making women in those communities unsafe.

For the first time, A Decade Lost also looks at U.S. efforts to stop the pull of violent ideologies, such as in overseas “de-radicalization” programs and its strategic communication campaign in the United States and abroad.
“The U.S. government is working at cross purposes in its counter-terrorism strategy,” said Ms. Huckerby.
“On the one hand, it says that ensuring women’s equality is a matter of national security, while on the other it de-prioritizes development assistance for women and girls and cuts off funding to women’s rights organizations that are on the front lines against violent extremism in their communities. When the U.S. squeezes women between terror and counter-terror, no-one is safer.”
The Report also exposes serious collateral impacts of actions — such as targeted killings, deportation, and detention — that target men, some of which, have now persisted for nearly a decade.
“When families and communities in the United States are torn apart by detention and deportation, women are left to pick up the pieces, living in fear that if they report crimes, the government will deport them or family members,” said Lama Fakih, CHRGJ’s Gender, Human Rights, and Counter-Terrorism Fellow. “New efforts to engage Muslims do not deal with these concerns, but rather continue to locate the problem of terrorism in Muslim communities with scant regard for the consequences.”
Among the report’s recommendations, CHRGJ calls on the Obama Administration to make public its first ever policy on the role of development in countering violent extremism and release its new policy on engaging with communities in the United States to prevent extremism.

A Decade Lost: Locating Gender in U.S. Counter-Terrorism

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